According to PPP, some 22-percent of voters had the Packers are their favorite NFL team, that compared to 11-percent for Cowboys favorites. (In the ‘favorite team’ voting the Chicago Bears, New York Giants and Pittsburgh Steelers each got an 8-percent vote as favorite pick.)

And there’s more.

As part of the survey, responders were asked ‘favorability’ questions about both the Cowboys and Packers.

Regardless as to whether the subgroup was narrowed by ideology, gender, race, or age — all really like the Packers. The team was seen as positive by 57-percent of voters.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, the Cowboys were generally viewed unfavorably, with 41-percent of voters having a negative opinion of them.

The overall dislike of the Cowboys wasn’t even challenged along political lines. According to the poll, Democrats prefer the Packers 44-26. Republicans had Green Bay on top 60-29 and independents prefer them 44-30.

The Cowboys only came in first when pollsters were asked one question – “Who’s you’re least favorite NFL team”. Twenty-two-percent had the Cowboys as their least favorite. Jerry and the crew were disliked twice as much as the Chicago Bears, who 11-percent had as their least favorite team.

Diehard Cowboys fans would argue that unprecedented press conference coverage and television game ratings prove the poll wrong. But it appears that a large number of people contributing to those high TV ratings are tuning in hoping the Cowboys will lose.

If Cowboys fans were hoping to save face with the America’s most popular quarterback vote – they’re out of luck. Tony Romo only garnered 4-percent of the favorite QB vote. Given a choice of nine quarterbacks Denver Broncos QB Tim Tebow came out on top with 15-percent of the outright vote, but when looking at net favorability Peyton Manning was favorite.